History
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The earliest historical records for the town are traced back to the foundng of the Abbey by David 1st, in 1113 he had brought an order of Tironensian monks from France, giving them land in Selkirk, but in 1128 their monastery was moved to Kelso. At that time the nearest town of prominence was just across the River Tweed, the important Royal Burgh of Roxburgh and its castle, a flourishing settlement, once at the very heart of Scottish Politics, and former residence of Kings, Roxburgh was the principal place of government for more than a century, with schools, churches, courts, and a Royal mint. Kelso Abbey itself was one of the most important of the Border Abbeys, two kings were crowned there, James 3rd after the death of his father at Roxburgh, and his son James 4th in 1488, as well as being the burial ground for David 1st son, Prince Henry in 1152. As the Reformation took hold, and with King Henry V111’s determination to destroy all Border Abbeys, by 1550 Dryburgh, Jedburgh, Melrose and Kelso had been all but destroyed, there were attempts at rebuilding but all the Abbeys continued to decline, and the number of monks based here dwindled until by late 16th century they had completely gone. A Parish church and a school used part of the site, from 1650 to approx 1770. Fires in 1645 and 1742 virtually destroyed all of the central part of the town, causing a major reconstruction, with the subsequent buildings around the square having a very Georgian look to them. The square is the largest market square in Scotland, with the Town House ( Town Hall) it’s stunning centrepiece, built in 1816 to replace the old Tolbooth, it was originally home to the local court and the Town Council, but now is the residence of the registrar and the Tourist Information office. In the centre of the square itself can still be seen the old Bull ring, used on market days by farmers to tether their animals. The main streets emanating from the square are also still cobbled, and legends states that the horse carrying Bonnie Prince Charlie to Derby in November 1745, threw a shoe, this can still be seen in Roxburgh Street which heads north from the town centre. At the foot of Roxburgh Street, as it leads onto the square is an area known as “Cunzie Neuk” as Cunzie is an old Scots word for coin, it is believed that this may have been the site for the Royal mint for Roxburgh. So far this is only speculation. North of the town at the top of Roxburgh Street is the entrance to Floors Castle residence of the Duke of Roxburgh, this is the largest inhabited house in Scotland and although it makes an impressive sight now, it was once a much plainer affair. The original house which was typically simple, was re-built in the 1720’s for John the first Duke of Roxburgh by William Adam on a grander scale, however it was in 1849 when further embellishment by William Playfair providing the addition of the turrets and domes, and leaving the more elaborate castle that you see today. The castle was used in the making of the film Tarzan - Lord of Greystoke, and for the romantics among us, Prince Andrew was supposed to have proposed to Sarah Ferguson in the castle gardens. |

